Showing posts with label pain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pain. Show all posts

Sunday, February 12, 2012

Seriously?


Sunday morning, two-somthing A.M.

 So, apparently the bleeding wasn't gone for good after all, though it had been quiet for 2 weeks.

At the ER now. Catheterized. Again. :(

Chances are good that I will be down at Mayo this week getting a surgical solution to the problem (whatever that is...) which may even involve a hospital stay, I'm not sure yet. Will know more Monday.

The whole process was far, far less painful this time -- partially because we caught the problem much earlier, and partially because I premedicated myself this time before even going in.

Jen is learning more than she ever wanted to know about catheters, just by being in the room. She's the best.

Update: I'm home now, the ER was just an annoying (but necessary) trip to get the cath in. Hopefully it will be removed tomorrow (Monday) in Rochester.

Thursday, February 02, 2012

Blood, Studies, Shots and Chemo

Warning: this post is over 5,300 words, or about 10 printed pages.


I'm a 44 year old male Minnesotan, a teacher, writer and musician by trade. I have a form of cancer known as Bladder Cancer, also sometimes called Transitional Cell Carcinoma, or TCC. "With squamous cell differentiation", the doctors would tell me. It's is a highly aggressive, very rare, and extremely deadly cancer that affects both men and women. According to statistics I’ve read, it is most often environmentally caused. Oddly, it is even more common among smokers than lung cancer (I am not now and have never been a smoker). I'm pretty sure I contracted my cancer environmentally while working in a paint warehouse nearly 20 years ago. Here, I was repeatedly exposed to Benzene, a solvent used to clean the commercial paint sprayers, and a known cause for bladder cancer. I remember reading somewhere that Bladder Cancer has about a 20 year lead time until disease appearance, and that’s right about on track for mine.


Most bladder cancer patients are in their 60's and 70's. We don't really know why I got it so young.

Since the cancer’s initial discovery in June, 2010, my cancer has metastasized, which means that it has spread. I'm now at stage 4. As high as it goes. This is the elite club that you don't want to be in. It means that the cancer has gone systemic and is now spreading freely through my lymph nodes and bloodstream. Its no longer contained in the bladder -- or even seen in the bladder at all at the moment -- but is now in the lymph system and in the lungs. I'm told that the kidneys are a common next target for TCC. Common life expectancy for TCC after reaching a stage 4 diagnosis is about 2-4 months, initially. I metastasized about 6 months ago. Luckily, the cancer hasn’t yet affected any vital organs to any great degree at this point, so I have a reprieve -- an unusually good situation for a stage 4 patient, while it lasts. Conservative estimates on my lifespan range now from 2 years to the more optimistic "less than 10 years". I am told that there is no hope of remission or eliminating the disease. Miracles can happen, but don't plan on it, kid.

What keeps me going is that new therapies are being tried all the time, and the longer I can buy time with chemo, the better the chance that they'll come up with something new that works better.

So, that's the backstory.

Zoom in on Minneapolis, Minnesota. A town like any other, with people going about their daily lives. Meet Michael. He's had a relatively quiet spell after his last chemo series, which lasted for a grueling 18 weeks, and has lately been enjoying the company of his dog, his girlfriend, his daily pursuits... while his energy slowly improves. But the last couple of weeks have totally sucked. In a major way.

Oh: and, fair warning: this will be gross. Sorry about that. See, the thing with this cancer thing is that it may well get more and more gross and difficult to read until I'm left talking to myself. That day might even be today, I don't know.

Monday

A week ago Monday I had a barrage of tests at Mayo. One of the key tests was a PET/CT scan to see how far the cancer has progressed.

When I was getting prepped for this, gowned and waiting, they brought in a member of the catheterization team.

I wore (suffered, endured) a catheter for two full weeks at home following a bladder surgery last fall. The catheter I had in at that time was a so-called "3-way" catheter that involves an "in" tube (for adding saline to flush the system and bladder), an "out" tube (which helps the catheter to function in the way that you might guess a catheter is supposed to function) and a 3rd tube, which adds saline to an internal balloon that keeps the catheter in. Note: don't ever try to yank a 3-way catheter out yourself, you'll pass out from the pain. I have this on good authority.

All told, the catheter is a fairly monstrous device made of blue rubber and clear plastic tubing, and is the diameter of a pen-type highlighter. It has some completely unnecessary ridges on the plastic sides of the part that gets inserted. Think capped fountain pen, perhaps. Perhaps this was a well-intentioned yet misguided design choice by the manufacturer, meant to give the device a little more pizazz. So to speak.

So, they pull out this thing and I start to panic and explain all the troubles that I had before, when I wore one for two weeks. How uncomfortable it was and how I shuffled around with an undiagnosed bladder infection for the first 10 days. I hit the 10 pain scale a few times during that time when the bladder would spasm and cramp -- something that can be common while touching the bladder from the inside. Which is what the catheter and its balloon do, by design.

I tell the Mayo catheter tech that I've had PET/CTs in the past there with no catheter.

Sorry, the tech says: the doctor wants a catheter in. You can reschedule the scan, if you'd prefer?

At this point I'm scared and very apprehensive... but I want he results of this scan. This is why I'm in Rochester -- to see how much the cancer has grown -- or "progressed", as they call it -- if at all, since the end of chemo 6 weeks ago. I remind myself that some catheterizations I've had in the past have been relatively painless, if the tech knows what they’re doing. At this point I'm mostly convinced to just go ahead, in order to expedite the scan and just get the results. Maybe Dr. Hunter (my urologist) ordered the catheter to get a better picture of the bladder. It turns out, no. But I get ahead of myself.

At this point the tech and I start talking about lidocaine, which I know sounds like "Iocaine powder" from the Princess Bride, but is far less deadly. Lidocaine is what Dr. Hunter always uses for his cystoscopies on me. That's where they stick a pencil-sized, flexible, shiny black camera tube up you-know-where and I get to watch live, closed-curcuit TV of the inside of my bladder. He always asks if I want to watch on the TV screens and I always say I'll wait for the movie to come out. But I usually peek anyhow at some point. Lidocaine gel is a sterile numbing agent -- a little like Novacaine that you'd use at the dentist -- except this is added in appropriate and helpful places with the aid of a flexible, plastic-needled syringe. It stings a bit, but its better than the alternative.

Lidocaine? No, the tech says. They don't have lidocaine available. It's by doctor's orders only. Prescription, you see. And we don't have a prescription for it. And can't get one on short notice. We'll have to do it without lidocaine. Or not at all.

After much internal deliberation, but feeling that I really don't have a choice, I decide to go ahead with the catheter and the scan, even though I know that the catheter is going to hurt like hell. Just breathe through it, and all that shit.

I'm surprised that my girlfriend Jen didn't hear me screaming repeatedly from the waiting area 200 feet away, even over the persistent din of Fox news. The catheter turns out to be monumentally painful going in and is frankly a traumatizing, violating experience: the catheter tube freely tears its way through the urethral sphincter and also through the prostate, which -- if you were in that movie where they shrink people down and inject them, in a miniature spaceship, to fix some problem that only a team of miniature scientists can fix – the prostate would be one of the first stops you'd make on your way to the bladder. Yeah, I said this would be pretty gross. Feel free to tune out.

In the waiting room afterward, I hugged Jen hard and cried for awhile.

So the scan was done, the catheter was removed, and yea, we left that place of torment.

Immediately, my reward for being catheter-free was that I experienced insanely painful, burning urination for about 24 hours. Think wire brushes. It wasn't hard to figure out what caused that. 

Tuesday

Tuesday we met with doctors and got the unwelcome news that the cancer is "progressing" (growing) and that I would need to start chemo up again. ASAP. Within a week, preferably.

This was hard news to hear for both Jen and I, which is an understatement, I guess. I've been told that chemo is going to be a part of the rest of my life, with several series' every year to keep the cancer at bay. I just wasn't expecting it again so soon. I had wanted to take another trip with Jen somewhere. To have a little more warning. A little more time to prepare, mentally. To make the most of it. 

Done at Mayo, we headed back to the cities. Luckily, the burning pain had faded by Tuesday night for the most part.


Wednesday


Even with the pain following the catheterization, there had been no bleeding. But then, blammo: on Wednesday morning (and not the first trip to the bathroom that day) the floodgates opened and all of sudden I had found a way to turn water into wine. "Holy shit!" I'm pretty sure I said in the Perkins bathroom in Bloomington, while waiting for new tires on my car. My guess was that I'd just lost a half a pint of blood. At least. And a similar amount every time after that. I was afraid that I was going to pass out imminently from internal blood loss. I thought that this might be it: the beginning of the end. It’s scary enough to think that you're about to die in the near future, but I had never before thought that I might die in a Perkins bathroom in Bloomington. There really isn't a great place to die, but I can think of many better.

So, freaked out. I called everyone. I called the urology on-call people at Mayo, I called my support network people and alerted them that I might need to go to the ER promptly (forming a clot could be not only painful but could seize up the whole system and require -- at best -- another catheterization in the ER or at worst, a surgical procedure to reopen things and to stop the bleeding. Either way, more catheters, and the second option involves sedation, as well as cameras, metal tools and various devices including cauterizing lasers being inserted up there. All at the same time. Talk about wire brush. For weeks afterward.

Frantically driving home from the Perkins -- by way of the Tire place, where I didn't even blink at the more than $800 bill, signing the visa receipt and leaving with as few words as possible -- I pounded drinking water from the bike bottle I'd thoughtfully brought along that morning. The whole way, drinking water that had been salvaged from my Perkins water glass and from the water cooler at the tire dealership. Brother Kevin left work on short notice to wait with me in case I needed an ASAP ride to the ER. 

So, on advice of the Mayo urologists, I drank lots and lots of water and set a timer for every 10 minutes. After a few hours the bleeding became less aned less. And I managed to avoid the ER and another catheterization.

It was all completely fine and normal from then on out, ever-after. Or was it?

Sunday

On top of everything else, I had gotten the news earlier in the week that an Aunt that I was very close to, and who was very much the matriarch of our large family, had just passed away in Iowa and that the funeral would be the following Saturday. I wanted to go, and did. But spending my last weekend pre-chemo far away from Jen and my dog and my home and my doctors was hard. In the end it was good to see so many of my extended, seldom-seen family members and to have a chance to support my mother, who has been such a great source of support to me.

At the end of the weekend, when many of my family were saying goodbye to me, they had that look in their eyes as if they thought they might be saying goodbye for the last time. I’m pretty sure they all believed that I didn’t notice.

Back at home Sunday Night, everything was normal, normal, normal, and then, all of a sudden... water into wine again, but much more severe than before. Again, my guess was that I had lost a pint of blood at a minimum that evening. Against my objections, my mother decided to come over just in case I needed to go to the ER urgently, which was a very good call of her part.

This time, we were not so lucky. The gulping of the water and the bathroom breaks every 10 minutes simply stopped working after a while. Nothing was working. Which only meant one thing: a clot. The spirit was willing, but the flesh was blocked. And that gallon of water I just pounded would be coming due shortly.

When the faucet shut off completely, we were off to the ER at Abbott Northwestern at about 11 pm. I passed the cursory security guard triage and made it through the locked doors. Inside, the ER was blissfully empty. No-one in the waiting room, and empty beds in back.

(http://www.wongbakerfaces.org/)
The pain grew quickly from bladder discomfort, where you "have really needed to go for a while now, and would someone just stop the damn car, I can go in the bushes" to searing pain like something is actually going to rip open inside there, to -- and this is where I reached my #10 pain level that is descried as the worst pain you can imagine and is accompanied by a crying, frowney face on the pain scale card -- the urine backing up into the kidneys. It felt like I'd just been shot in my low back and flank, and I was reduced to a crying, pleading, screaming, mess, begging them to do something for the pain. A 10 mg shot in the ass of morphine did nothing, and I didn't even feel the needle going in. Chewing a 5mg oxy-co-done -- which is not an approved method of taking it, and is more of a street-junkie way of ingesting it fastest) did nothing, either. It tasted like you'd imagine a chalky pill would.

The nurse spent a very long while getting the catheter contraption and supplies set up while I paced the room and asked over and over why it was taking so long, why it was taking so long, and: where was this pain coming from?

Blissfully for me, the ER doc was able to prescribe my friend Lidocaine for the catheterization, and the nurse slid the catheter in relatively painlessly. Compared to the 10-scale-pain in the back, sides and bladder, everything else was a mosquito-buzz, anyhow.

As pressure was relieved, the pain in the back and flank faded at the exact same rate as the bladder pressure over about 15 seconds. From 10 to 0 in about 15 seconds is heavenly. The absence of pain, for a little while at least, feels like pure pleasure. When I could speak again, I realized that my incoherent trauma had not been mine alone. I called out weakly, "I'm okay now, mom," to my 74 year-old retired mother, waiting anxiously on the other side of the curtain. By all rights I should be taking care of her, not the other way around. "Good," she called back. 

I find that I have some glimmer of understanding now of why people cut or injure themselves. During that level of pain, one can think of nothing but the pain. It is everything. It clears your mind -- but in a horrible, horrible way. I know that some people do have emotional pain that is (to them) bad enough so they feel the need to intentionally inflict a high level of pain in order to shut down their brains. This thought makes me extremely sad.

Needless to say, I'm not the sort of person who engages in serious pain for fun, and I have a harder and harder time these days understanding people who do. In the ER that night, I was mindless with pain and might have started breaking up the ER room had it gone on much longer. I noticed the uniformed and armed security guard, stationed not far away, was keeping an eye on me. If someone would ever intentionally reach that level of pain… it is beyond my understanding.

Released, finally, at about 2:30 am, and sent home with an “in-dwelling 3-way catheter" over night, to be removed at Mayo the next day. My mom volunteers to sleep on the couch to keep an eye on me, which I am grateful for, but guilty about at the same time. 

One of my worst nightmares is having an indwelling catheter. You don't really sleep when you have a catheter in: cumbrous tubing and collection bag. You lie down in the position that hurts least, and eventually pass out. You'll awake in the morning in the exact same position, stiff and sore. Hopefully the tubes will not have kinked or leaked and the bag isn't full enough that it the urine could be backing up into your kidneys. Setting a few overnight alarms helps with that. Hopefully, the bladder spasms (the cramping that the bladder does in reaction to a foreign object in it) don't drag you out of sleep and bring you back to a level-10 pain (as they did several times for me when I wore a catheter for 2 weeks last year). I have a prescription for bladder spasms, which helps.

Monday

Still with the catheter in, I limp to the car and brother Kevin drives me to Rochester and to Mayo,  to accomplish many things over two days. We're supposed to meet first with Dr. Abbott (the new Mayo oncologist) and sign the paperwork for the research study that I had been told I qualified for. This is a study that is testing a commonly used Bladder Cancer/Transitional Cell Carcinoma (TCC) drug known as Docetaxel (generic name) along with one of two possible additional experimental treatments. Ironically, this is the same drug company that Martha Stewart sold stock in in a big ole' panic following alleged insider information, and subsequently spent a little time in the Joint. But the drug company made money later and, word on the street is that these drugs are working and the trial so far is a success.

But, It turns out that because of my recent bleeding issue, I'm being disqualified. They don't know why I'm bleeding so much, and we all suspect the catheterization, but a catheterization shouldn't by itself cause two bouts of serious bleeding. I also have slightly higher than normal kidney values. Which they assured me is not dangerous in a daily sense, and is frequently seen in someone who has gone through as much chemo and recent contras-based testing as I've had. Those values should come down a bit, but Dr. Dr. Abbott mentioned that this can be a waiting game for admission, Meanwhile, I would not be getting treatment at all: something I can ill afford right now. 

So, I'm out of the study. I'm bummed about it, but also relieved in a way. It means fewer trips away to Rochester. Shorter times away from Jen and my dog Boo and home. It means an infusion center, close to home, where I know most everyone. And a new-to-me local oncologist (Dr. Straightshooter) with a history of "sharing patients" my my oncologist at Mayo, Dr. Abbott. The two of them are working together on my case. Which is more than I can say for Dr, Grampa (my former local Oncologist whom I fired at the end of chemo last time) and Dr. Pat, my old Mayo Oncologist, who I found useless. But I'll never know if those two drugs would have helped me. I tried, at least.

Apparently there is no hope of getting into this study, now, as Dr. Abbott doesn't believe in "hopscotching" treatments (jumping around to different med combos without giving one sufficient time to work) so he'd want to see how I'm doing (I learned that “progressing” is a bad term in the cancer lexicon) on the current course of Docetaxel alone.

Bring dropped from the study clears up my schedule at Mayo considerably, as most of the other things I had to do down there were mainly tests related to study admission: an EKG for my heart, a PET scan (the PET/CT scan I'd suffered through a week earlier wasn't the right type of scan for the study. Apparently the PET and the PET/CT are totally different. As well as x-rays of chest, blood tests, etc. All over the clinic campus. At Mayo, they give you a convenient printed daily schedule that you carry with you dutifully, and refer to often.

But I still have to get this damn catheter out and talk to Dr. Hunter (My Mayo Urologist) about what else might be going on. We get this meeting set up at 1pm, figure out that the bleeding must simply be due to the catheterization (he confirms that its not cancer returning in the bladder). Dr. Hunter mentions that if it keeps bleeding, come back in on Tuesday when he's in surgery and they'll figure out (and fix) the problem once and for all. Remember the cameras, tools and laser cauterizers, all at the same time? I do not prefer this option. I drink lots of water, and things work as they're supposed to up to and including the time of this writing. But if I start bleeding again, it will be a surgical solution.

In Rochester, Kevin and I stay in the Hope Lodge, which is a great service that the American Cancer Society runs. A facility across the street from the interconnected Clinics, it is huge and new-feeling, and offers hotel-type rooms to patients undergoing cancer treatment. Rooms are available (and free) as long as the patient meets the criteria for stay, and guests are allowed one "caretaker" (rooms have 2 beds). Each pod of rooms has its own kitchen area with refrigerator, full kitchen, etc. It is intended for long-term stays, and in fact there's usually a 4-night minimum stay. Mayo study participants (like I was supposed to be) get access to single-night rooms, though, so they were able to fast-track that for us and a multi-week approval process got reduced to a faxed request from Mayo, approved immediately. Oh, the power of drug companies. Of course, by the time we checked in, I knew I was out of the study. I did feel a tiny bit guilty about that. I had qualified, but no longer really did. Still, no one had a problem with it. I do have cancer, and am being treated at Mayo for it. Just not as part of the study. I will be able to stay there again if I'm having any other overnights tests in the future, though.

I also noticed that there is a note on the Hope Lodge code of Conduct sheet that warns that anyone abusing the kitchen privileges will be ejected immediately from the Hope Lodge and not allowed to return. There must have been a slew of kitchen evil-doers, there. Kevin and I dutifully throw out our refrigerated Italian leftovers from last night's meal, narrowly escaping an embarrassing, permanent expulsion from the Hope Lodge Rochester. Don't get me wrong about this. This is a great facility and an awesome service:  I was truly honored to be there, found the staff incredibly kind and helpful, and it was in a way comforting that I was among people who were like me. It was a safe place for a man or woman to have a shaven head, or to just read quietly in a soft chair in the corner of the common room. 

Tuesday

With the catheter out the day before, I had become a new man, fairly sprinting across intersections without looking both directions. I'm sure I mentioned that I'm still on a lot of pain meds for my back. Thanks be for brother Kevin, who looks out for such things for me. Today, Tuesday, we have planned a pelvic MRI, and an appointment to get the long, long awaited cortisone injections into my low back to fix the back pain that has been slowly driving me insane over the past 6 months and has essentially made me an opiate addict.

The MRI is scheduled for the "large-bore" scanner (to fit people who are 280# without feeling like they're being stuffed into a sausage casing). I walk into the room -- pre-medicated with Ativan for the anxiety and wearing a complicated 3-armed robe that is extra-tricky to put on when pre-medicated on Ativan. I quickly assess the situation.

"That's not a large bore scanner," I say, looking at the tiny tube, currently crammed with gear.

"Yeah, this is the regular one," The tech says.

He shows me a clipboard where the printed orders say "Patient is OK with using the regular MRI scanner". Which doesn't sound like something I'd ever say, even under duress. But that which is written must be obeyed. The tech doesn't know who wrote it. It wasn't the MRI team, is all he knows. I was specifically assured verbally the day before that I'd be in a Large-Bore scanner, I tell him. That's impossible, the tech says, because all of them are booked all day today and tomorrow. We could get you in on Thursday?

In the interest of science, and in the interest of not having to reschedule my back injections yet again, and in the further interest of not busting up an MRI suite, I voluntarily get stuffed into the tube. Luckily, since they need to scan just my pelvis, my head is at the edge and I can mostly see out. My arms have to hang above my head, which causes the shoulder joints to sear with pain after about 15 minutes.

My scan is 30 minutes and, if you haven't ever had an MRI, there is a good reason that they make you put in earplugs. It’s is insanely loud and sounds like the world's worst techno band, making thunking noises for 2 or 3 minutes at a time in defined patterns. At one point the machine sounded like it was saying "back back back back back back back back..." but very quickly, with a male, German accent. Later, it sounded like an American male saying "bladder bladder bladder bladder bladder bladder...", drawing out the "a"s extra long. But all of that could have been the Ativan talking as well. 

Less than 1/2 hour after the scan, I'm in another building getting my long-awaited back injections. The Mayo radiology teams have consistently been great at explaining what they're doing as they're doing it, and addressing any pain. There is one nurse assigned just to talk to me, who distracts me with an oxygen tube (sometimes directing the flow on my hair or my cheek or near my nose and mouth) and holding my hand through the worst parts. Both of the radiologists keep up a constant patter, asking me where I'm from, why I moved back to Minnesota, etc. The lidocaine injections sting worse than anything else, and after four only briefly painful shots, my low back joints are filled with some sort of magical drug that should reduce the inflammation for a few weeks at a minimum and a few months at the outside. Relief is felt almost immediately, which I why I'm able to sit at my computer chair and type such a needlessly verbose and excessively detailed blog post.

And we're done at Mayo, once again.

On the ride home, I'm addressing another issue via the phone: I mentioned the 3-way catheter and what each tube does. If you are an ER nurse and you forget to cap the tube that allows one to add saline to the system, the damn thing will leak. I awoke to a nasty surprise that Sunday night.

The following Monday, when I was off to Mayo, my mother had kindly stripped the bed and put all the bedding in the washer. My new dog Boo, a retired racing greyhound, clearly traumatized by watching her new owner shuffle around on Sunday in pain and smelling of blood -- and likely smelling her master's blood and urine on the mattress, now soils the stripped bed herself. Possibly this is a covering-up-the-scent-of-an-injured-member-of-the-pack, which I know that wolves do, and I have seen greyhounds do once before with another Greyhound that I later found out was dying. Or it could just have been high stress, or anger. She was not punished for it, as she was not caught in the act and it was discovered hours later. You can't punish a dog for a crime long after the fact. Their brains don't work that way.

But the fact remained that I now need to shop for, buy and move a new mattress. Tonight. When all I wanted to do was to sit on the couch and go to bed early. I spend a while trying to coordinate this and find people to help me move it (I'm not supposed to lift anything because of the back injections) until we realize that its just one side of the mattress, and it has been cleaned and dried as best as can be over the past couple of days.

Returning home, I flip the mattress over, resolve to keep Boo out of the bedroom for the near future at least, and plan to buy a new mattress this weekend. 

Wednesday

Today, at my local Oncologist’s office in Minneapolis, I meet with my new oncologist, Dr Straightshooter (so named for his ability to give me the info I need, even if it isn't good), get blood work, and start up Chemo yet again. This will be the first treatment of my 3rd series of chemo. I went through 3 rounds of chemo last year (a round is 3 weeks for me), 6 rounds in 2011, and this newest series is of unspecified length. I'll be getting chemo ad nauseum, and then some. I'll do a PET/CT scan again at Mayo (this time with no catheter, thankfully) after 3 rounds, or 9 weeks.

Its hard, as you might imagine, to be back in chemo and dealing with the flu-like aches, pains, tiredness, nausea and lack of appetite. At least the back is slightly better (and expected to improve day by day). My left femur, which I broke in a motorcycle accident in 1991, started hurting again in a brief, low-speed walk this afternoon. I had to sit on a retaining wall with Jen and found myself getting weepy. I am tired of all the modifications and I worry that one of these times the pain will just not go away, and it will be like that for the rest of my life. We discussed me getting a cane today.

I can and will keep pushing on, but it sucks that it’s so much effort and requires so many modifications. Not just on my behalf: Jen's work schedule (and subsequent important meetings) get scheduled around my chemo. Her employees don't come to work if they're sick, because of the risk of her passing it on to me.  Brother Kevin, a senior executive, dashes out of work on short notice, missing meetings. A couple of other old friends who live nearby are people I know I can count on to do the same. My mom sleeps on my couch sometimes. Jen worries. Boo worries. I hesitate to pull the metaphorical red cord on the wall unless I really need to. I had to do it twice in the past week, and that scares me.

Today, the day after chemo, is much as it ever was. I'm watching myself for new symptoms. So far, the nausea seems worse, and the tiredness more pronounced. Based on the literature, week two of my chemo round should be the "nadir" where my blood cell counts are at their lowest. This is when I'll be at highest risk of infection and will have my lowest immune function and therefore greatest risk of getting sick. Jen is already quizzing family and friends in advance of gatherings to make sure that there is no one sick expected to attend. Everyone washes his or her hands. I sometimes wear a mask, and certainly always do when I fly. I glare at people who cough or sneeze in public without covering it up.

I'm trying to slip into this routine again and finding that I know the ropes, but I'd guess it's a little like getting sent back to prison: you know the routine, but it doesn’t make it any easier the second time around. Or the third.

Thursday, January 19, 2012

And now for something completely different

Blah blah blah blah blah-de-blah bah back pain. Blah blah blah blah Mayo blah blah blah blah blah Oxy. Blah blah blah-de-blah blah blah blah Acupuncture blah blah blah blahbidy blah. Blah blah sleep blah blah blah blah-de-blah blabidy blah neutrophils blah blah blah blah Ambien blah blah blah-de-blah blah.

Boo

Is painfully cute! 

And that's the news.


Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Its Boosday!

Boo is doing great, and is starting to respond more and more to her new name.

I got up last night to use the restroom and noticed that she had moved off the couch and into the office, where she also has a bed -- she has a bed in the bedroom also, but maybe she was shy about coming in uninvited. So I invited her up on the bed for the first time. I know that this can a slippery slope if you don't plan to have the dog on the bed all the time, but its nice to have a dog on the bed, I think. Boo will learn eventually that the rule is: she can be on the bed, but only when Jen's *not* here. This worked great with Kaia, though there was nearly always some pouting on Kaia's part.

Boo on her couch.
So far, it's eerie how familiar Boo feels. She's been here less than 48 hours and already it seems like I've known her for far longer than that. She does look a lot like Mia (the all-white girldog that I had before Kaia) and acts a lot like both of them. But its more than that -- she's so easy to have around that I have to keep reminding myself that we only just met, and that this house and my expectations are all new to her.

I left briefly yesterday and there were no accidents or destroyed furniture or chewed-up shoes when I returned, and I heard no howling or barking. I wasn't too worried, but this is all a good sign. I'll leave for a little longer today at some point, and I'm hoping that it all continues to work out.

Mia in about 2009
In my experience with adopted hounds (Boo is my 8th greyhound) there is a pretty standard process by which they settle into their new homes. All greyhounds have had lives before, and have been uprooted many times. Most are shipped off to trainers in other states and may race in various different locations as well. Boo, as far as I can tell, was raised in Georgia, and raced in Kansas and West Virginia. It seems that she was then sold to a farm in Iowa where she had 4 litters of pups -- 15 total. Then, after retirement, on to Minnesota to live with a foster family for 2 weeks, then another foster family for a few weeks, and then -- finally -- here. So it's understandable that she doesn't really know whether this is just a stop off, or if she lives here now. Even still, she's quiet and well-behaved. This is one of the reasons (and a sad one, honestly) that greyhounds are favored by animal research facilities: they take well to being kenneled, and are quiet and don't complain very much. Some veterinarians also keep a greyhound as a blood donor: all dogs have the same blood type, and greyhounds have a higher than normal Total Blood Volume (TBV). They also tolerate having an IV in all the time, will live in a kennel, and are quiet and well mannered.

Kaia about 2010
So, after many changes in their past lives, I find that the first 3-6 months of being in their "forever home" the dogs are friendly and social, but aren't sure what this new place is. After that period, when it seems like they've figured out that they're really going to stay, I find that the next 3-6 months are key as they become very attached and may have some separation anxiety. The dog's personality determines what form this insecurity takes and the degree to which it manifests. After that 3-6 month separation anxiety period, the greyhounds seem to relax and settle in. My job is to be as consistent a fixture in her life as I can, and to establish safe spaces for her and a reliable routine. The more she feels safe here, the more she'll relax and trust that she's not going anywhere.

The Back, etc.


Over the past few days I've been stretching out my lower back in a quest to find something -- anything -- to alleviate the pain. This seems to help a bit, and I'm hoping that it will continue to get better. Likewise, I've been walking. No marathon treks yet, but 6 or 8 blocks at least each day. Hopefully this will strengthen the back and encourage the muscles to relax a bit.

Strangely, this sounds really good about now.
The leg has been better. I still don't know what's going on down there, but I do think that the nerves (that were messed up in the surgery) are coming back, as I feel mildly painful electric jolts into my inner thighs. And -- a new thing -- my thigh muscles in both legs are sore, not just the left leg, which was the troublesome one before. You know how sometimes your muscles cramp or spasm when you get really gold? My thighs feel like that sometimes during the day No spasms exactly, but the same soreness that might come from being punched in the thigh. Its not in exactly the same area as the numbness was, though. So it might be related, it might not. Its an annoying mystery.

The pain meds (60 mg daily) appear to be working for the most part. Coupled with the stretching and walking, I don't feel the need to go any higher. I'm hopeful that Mayo will have some insight, and I have a lot of eggs in that particular basket, hoping I'll have some answers sooner rather than later. I really do need to get off of these pain meds, though. On the day that I hit the 60mg/day level, I noticed that my skin looked ashen and there were dark circles under my eyes. It reminded me of my first glimpse of myself post-chemo. Anyhow: nothing new to report on that front, other than its all holding steady.




Friday, January 13, 2012

Free Beer and the Answer to All of Life's Questions

Not really. Just checking. Some of these posts -- and it seems to be the ones with the most provocative titles -- have been getting more readership than others. I have noticed that my post entitled "The Axis of Evil" has been getting a lot of love from Russia, and "The 20 mg Solution" (and a lot of my posts about Oxy), have been getting a similar amount of attention from Colombia. And I'm huge in Denmark, Romania and Slovenia, for some reason.

Likewise, an older post named "Psychosomatosis" continues to be perused regularly. Perhaps it's a shoegazer-death-jam band name or the name of a gripping, grocery-store mystery novel that perhaps involves someone waking from a coma... only to name the person that tried to kill them! 

For that matter, I also think "The 20mg Solution" would be a great band name. I might still use that one myself.

I can't see who's reading, but I do have some stats that give me some interesting information about how people access the blog in general. Safari (a Mac browser) is the #1 browser used, with Explorer and Firefox close runner-ups. Chrome (which is what I use, though I have excluded my own vists from the results) is a distant 4th. It's a great browser, people. Really. Firefox? That's so... 1998. A handful use the Opera browser, which is an off-off-off label browser that is simply horrendous. Whoever that is, you *really* need to switch to a better browser. 24 visits came from an a browser named Glue. I have no idea what Glue is.

Windows is the dominant operating system used, and not surprisingly. Windows accounts for 80-90% of all computers used worldwide.  This means that only 10-20% of worldwide computer users have any sense whatsoever. Oh no he di-int. Oh yes he di-id.

Desktops are still the primary means to access the blog. But desktop Linux lags well behind the relatively small numbers of iPhone, iPad and Android users. There is just 1 recorded access using a Samsung operating system to access the blog. Maybe that's my mystery fan from Belarus.

Drugs, and Conversations with Dr. Hunter

The pain has been ramping up to an almost unbelievable degree for me. 2 weeks ago I was on my 10mg 2x a day (20mg per day). Last night Jen and I nearly headed to the ER, but more and more opiates took care of the pain. As of today, I've managed to creep up to 20 mg 3x per day -- 60 mg total, or three times what I was one a few weeks ago. Likewise, the remaining pain is twice as bad as it was, even after the pain meds. At this point I'm feeling the pain constantly. Its like a sedative, and waking up is more like coming out of anesthesia than anything else. It is fixing the pain for the most past. I feel like now I'm at the pain level of people who live with some soreness in their backs. This level of pain management simply cannot continue, though. Right now I've crossed the line back into the "should not drive at all" category because of the pain meds. The side effects are of course ramping up as well, and I'm starting to develop nausea from all the Oxy-tin. I'm starting to feel like I'm in a room with big spiky walls that is is closing is, with decreasing options: pain, or soupy-headed dopiness. Today they may have converged: I have both.

I have an series of doctor appointments set up next week at Mayo, where I'll see a Urologist, an Oncologist and an orthapedist. I just talked with Dr. Hunter (my urologist, who is my primary Mayo doc) and he said that the orthopedist will likely need to request the scans she needs when I meet with her, rather than me being able to do them the day before with my other scans. Dr. Hunter said that rarely will the pre-order scans, since they're not totally sure what they will need or want without meeting with me. This makes sense, though it just isn't what I want to hear. What this means is that I will need to be back down to Mayo soon after our initial meeting to get an MRI (I could also do this locally to the Cities, I assume) and then meet with her again. I had been banking on the idea of finding some relief at this meeting, or at least some direction, but now it seems that I'll have to wait yet again for a different type of scan. 

Dr. Hunter mentioned that if the leg pain is tumor pain, they could do some localized radiation in that area. This might provide some relief, I would hope. 

What has me losing sleep right now is only partially the pain itself. Its also the thought that I may never get out from under it again.

People have asked, but I don't have a Caring Bridge site. Perhaps at some point -- when/if I'm in a state where I can't really take care of myself -- I may break down and set one up or something like it. But I have a feeling that I will resist for as long as I can. I'm just too independent, and I can pick up the phone to have Jimmy John's deliver me a sandwich, or to have a housecleaner over, or have a guy shovel my walk or mow my lawn easily enough. I may have to admit defeat at some point, but hopefully not anytime soon. 

Right now my brain is exceptionally fuzzy because of the pain meds, and my eyes don't quite focus correctly. I have no hunger at all. Please don't take it personally if I'm more forgetful than normal. Reminders are a great idea, and putting things in writing (email, text, etc.) is always best. 

There's really no chance that I could do my grad school classes (especially two intense classes than both involve teaching clinicals) with this level of pain and medication. And my classes are scheduled to start on February 1st. I have until then to decide if I'll cancel classes or not, but I'd rather have some idea beforehand. It may very well be down to the wire.

Dogs

One bright spot recently is that I've been auditioning new dogs this week. This sounds odd to put it this way (and its not like I'm making them read a selection from Shakespeare or anything) but its a process of figuring out who will best work with me and my house, my life and schedule, who will get along best with Jen's cat, etc. Losing Kaia was exceptionally hard, and tougher still as it came at an extremely bleak time for me. Its been incredibly difficult to have an empty house these past months.

A few weeks ago I volunteered to help ferry a crop of 6 new greyhounds, newly retired from the track, up to the cities. In that vanful of 6 excited and bewildered dogs (everything is new for retired greyhounds) I found two that I felt would be a good match for me, and I was able to observe them for a few hours on the trip back. I met one -- a big shiny, black, mellow, 3 year old boydog -- on Wednesday, and another -- a smaller, clownish, quiet, lovey-dovey, mostly-white 7 year old mamadog -- last night. Currently, the mamadog is my clear favorite. Like Kaia, she was a champion racer and then went on to raise 4 litters of pups. I'll have more information to share here once I make the final decision, but I hope to have a new dog-companion buy the end of the weekend. No one could ever replace Kaia, but it would give me a wonderful added daily purpose to have something else to focus on.

One interesting note: The mamadog has an ancestor in common with Kaia, and also an ancestor in common with my dear departed Woody, who I lost back in 2001 (purebred racing greyhound lineage is clearly documented for each dog back to the year 1820). Strangely (or perhaps not) I can see elements of both dog's personalities in the new mamadog.




Thursday, January 12, 2012

I am the Ambien Walrus

This is the world's least interesting blog. Sorry about that. Log in to hear some guy complaining about his aches and pains. Who doesn't have those?

But, in my defense, I'm trying to track my experiences and make note on improvements, declines, etc. Its a diary that has unfortunately recently been a pain diary. All of us hope that I'll start writing about something else, soon. Today is not that day.

http://tinyurl.com/yed9a5n
Last night I went back to the Ambien. I wanted to see if I'd sleep through the night and not be awoken by pain. It worked! I still feel a bit run-over-by-a-truck-ish this morning, but I was not awoken by leg pain. I popped one (a full one, which is more than I had been taking) because the leg was bothering me so badly last night that I was afraid I wouldn't be able to get to sleep. But then when you develop virtually incurable (temporary) double vision, you know the Ambien is working, and its lights out.

I won't try any Ambien tonight, simply because I don't want it to be an every-night kind of thing and don't want to risk getting used to it and needing to eventually take more and more just to sleep at all. However, if the pain is excruciating before bed again I may change my tune and try one, though I feel like 1/2 would do it.

Ambien has an amnesia effect that makes you forget you're not sleeping. I once took it on a plane when the pipe band was going to Scotland years ago. when it was bedtime Scotland time, I took an Ambien, trying to get on the local sleep schedule. This is my preferred way of adjusting to jet lag, and it works great. But the problem was: I wasn't tired in the least when I took it, so I just stayed up and talked to people on the plane until I felt tired. I eventually drifted off, but afterward was told of conversations that I'd had with people before I went to sleep that I simply did not remember.

I'm convinced that it does actually put you to sleep as well, but perhaps it reduces over-thinking. And I do far too much over-thinking these days.

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Another Possibility

Last night, right about at 4 am, I woke up again with pain in my leg. But I think I may have another idea as to the pain's cause.

About 15 months ago I had abdominal surgery. This was a deep and invasive procure that left an enormous scar. The scar is small potatoes in the scheme of things, though it still surprises me when I see it in the mirror. The incision, when open, was probably big enough to pass a cantaloupe through, easily.

When I awoke from the anesthesia I complained of numbness in the inner thighs, which the doctors originally attributed to normal post-operative stuff. But as months went by and I still couldn't feel anything in the thighs, they mentioned that there are many tiny nerves in the area where they had to operate, and likely a few of them were cut in the process. It was, they assured me, a delicate multi-hour procedure that involved 3 surgeons. And its fricking Mayo Clinic -- not Doctor Nick's Hollywood Upstairs Medical Center -- with one of the world's leading specialists in bladder cancer on the job. The nerve group in the area where they were operating ties into the inner thighs and -- if cut -- could indeed cause numbness there. I was told that this numbness would just likely be the way that it is. The implication was that its a small price to pay (without it they would not have been able to do the lifesaving surgery) and that it doesn't affect quality of life very much. And they're right. Until now.

I have gotten used to the numbness over the past year and happened to notice a few days ago that it is not as numb as it once was. It is not back to 100%, but it's definitely better. I feel that the pain in the left leg could be part of those nerves coming back to life, reattaching, or recovering from that trauma. When I really pay close attention when its at its worst, its not always a constant pain, but more like a shooting pain. This implies (at least to me) that it is neurological and possibly not bone related.

Oh: one more thing to add in, here: I tried the Tiger Balm patch yesterday on leg and back. The back seemed to improve by about 10-15%, which was very nice. Although the burning feeling from the Tiger Balm is a little distracting and makes it hard to forget about the back. Possibly its just that I was focusing more on the Tiger Balm than on the back pain, but it really seemed like I was able to sit in uncomfortable chairs at dinner without pain. Of course, that could just be the Oxy 15. Anyhow, not really a perfect scientific experiment, but one that I'm continuing again today. Heck: it's worth a buck to have some relief. I could do half-assed testimonials for them, with a quote like that.

But the Tiger Balm on the leg: not so good. I had it on for about 3 hours, and it seemed to progressively make the leg pain worse, feeling finally like I had my upper thigh in a hydraulic vice that was made of molten lava and operated by satan. The pain faded after I removed the patch (which I tried to stick on to my back with only limited success, the adhesive quickly loses stickiness). So, for whatever reason (and I have a feeling that doctors couldn't tell me why, either) the Tiger Balm aggravated the leg and soothed the back. Which -- perhaps scientifically, now -- implies that they are different kinds of pain, or at least come from different sources. It implies to me that the back pain is largely muscular (though it may have a bone/spine/disc origin) but the leg is either bone or neurological. 

Catching up to the rest of the story here, the leg pain *could* be those nerves regenerating or rebuilding or whatever they're doing in there. The plus side, if true, means that the pain is not cancerous. And having the beginnings of never-ending cancerous bone pain is a pretty bleak horizon to stare at. The downside of the nerve-ending hypothesis is that the pain may continue for an unspecified period of time, with no treatment that I am aware of to dull the pain... other than my pal Oxy.

Doing some research (the internet is a dangerous thing) it seems like the pain could also possibly be sciatica. BUT: The sciatic nerve runs down the back of the thigh. My pain is definitely on the front. So, my armchair self-diagnosis is currently neurological.

Perhaps Ironically, I saw an neurologist at Mayo last fall, who said that my back pain was not neurological. I'm meeting with 3 docs at may in a few weeks, none of which are a neurologist. Now, I do wish I had a meeting with a neurologist scheduled, as I have a feeling that the orthopedist is going to want to send me back to the neurologist for the leg pain. I'll call tomorrow and see if I can squeak in a neurologist visit, also.

It is still odd that the pain centers on the old bone break. And I do know that feeling well: it would sometimes ache a bit for a day or so when there was a storm or pressure change, for a few years after the break. It hasn't really troubled me at all in many years, and it has never been this painful, this consistently.

To further confuse the issue and disagree with myself, the theory of post-chemo pain does still make sense, also. There is documented evidence of old bone break pain after chemo (Jen was nice enough to dig some up for me).

More will be discovered at Mayo. And if not, I'll be highly frustrated and extremely discouraged. I'm still hopeful at the moment, of course, but expect a rant or two if I come back from Rochester with no better insight into the back and leg pain.

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Tiger Bomb

While picking up a few things at the co-op today I walked past the Tiger Balm rack. For some reason I always forget about Tiger Balm. Even though it works, I've always felt that it falls into the classification of Things That Trick You Into Thinking You're Not In Pain. But then, I guess that's really okay in some circumstances. Certainly, all of us would have the root cause of the pain go away rather than mask it if we had the choice. But -- if that's not really an option -- I feel better about slathering a bunch of natural-type stuff on my skin than taking addictive pills, if all either is going to do is cover up the pain.

I tried the Tiger Balm patch, which I've never really done before. They're like $1 each, so maybe it's just my innate cheapness that has kept me from trying them. Or -- and this is more likely -- I probably bought a pack and kept them around for something special, and finally tossed them when they expired 3 years later.

Right now I have one on my leg (just over the femur-break that has been troubling me so much) and one on the back. The back area is tougher to treat, because at this point I'd need one that's about 1 foot by 2 feet square to get the entire affected area. The leg is easier to cover.

Are they working? I think so. I'll leave them on for about 12 hours and see how long they last and what they do.

Meanwhile, I can't think of Tiger Balm without thinking of this clip from one of my favorite shows, The Venture Brothers. (The clip is work-safe, assuming you're allowed to stream stuff from cartoon network.)

http://video.adultswim.com/the-venture-bros/tiger-balm.html


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The Dark Side of Morning

As has happened for the past few nights, I have been dragged slowly and inevitably from the depths of sleep at almost exactly 4 am. Whereas the back pain is usually the primary source of pain, these days it often takes a backseat to the bone pain that I feel in my left femur (the upper leg bone, and the biggest bone in your body).

I know I've talked about it, though it is worth mentioning again that I broke this femur in a motorcycle accident in 1991, and there is also a rod down the middle of the femur. It seems odd that a 20-year old injury (that has caused me no pain at all since about 1994) has started hurting again within the past 2 months, and so deeply and intensely. I have been told that old scars and wounds can reopen during chemo, but I have not yet been able to get an answer as to how this might relate to old broken bones. And also: chemo is over, already.

Of course, my brain goes straight to bone metastases -- or "bone involvement" as doctors so gently like to put it. I've had bone scans (but, admittedly, not since before I felt this pain) that *should* catch any metastatic disease in the bones. Though I'm still unclear exactly how bone scans work: I don't know if they're head-to-toe scans, or simply confined to the same area they're doing the PET/CT on, as some sort of bonus ("buy a PET/CT now and get a free bone scan!") freebie. After my last PET/CT scans in October, Dr Grampa (my now-former oncologist) told me that my bone scan was negative. I was surprised: I hadn't been told that I was even getting a bone scan, I thought I was just getting a PET/CT. Yet they somehow managed to do it at the same time using (apparently) the same equipment, without me knowing. Maybe its just a guy in the control booth eating a sandwich who looks over at me lying on the table -- really carefully -- for like a minute, and then checks a big box that says: "Bone Scan = Awesome."

All I really know about bone scans is that in the movie "The Pursuit of Happyness" (sic), Will Smith's mustachioed character sells bone-density scanners when he's not napping with his young son on public bathroom floors, getting arrested, working his ass off for the unappreciative Man, or having his wife leave him. You should watch it: its really an uplifting movie. In the end, it taught me very little about bone scans, though.

But the main point being: my leg hurts. And so far no one knows why. Add that to the list of complaints that I need to talk to an orthopedist about, which will happen at Mayo in a week or so. 

Yesterday night when the leg was hurting I thought it might be because I'd walked more than normal that evening (about 2.5 miles), more than my usual route. And when I woke up last night I took an oxy(co)done because the pain was keeping me from sleeping, and also because the docs are always bugging me to take them for what they call "breakout" pain. So I did, but really felt no relief from it at all until about 6. And then I slept uncomfortably and groggily until about 9:30.

The Oxy-co-done is a shitty sleep aid, I find. It leaves you not rested and fresh as a daisy, ready to solve the world's problems... but instead the Ox claws you slowly awake until you find yourself in a (hopefully metaphorical) greasy heap: sleep having snuck out on you without paying the rent some time ago when you weren't looking, and leaving you glaring grumpily at the sun and feeling like you ought to be deciding between warm beer or vodka from a styrofoam cup with a cigarette floating in it for breakfast. As it turns out, I had yogurt, granola and a banana -- but it felt like I wasn't really being true to the character.

Tonight I did not go for a walk at all, partially to see if there was any difference in the pain. There wasn't. So I might as well at least get the exercise of walking if I'm going to have the pain anyhow. I'm also not taking any of the extra Oxy tonight, for the aforementioned reasons. 

I look forward to getting this bone stuff looked at, and I have decided that if they also (as pretty much all of the other doctors have done) throw up their hands and say: "Huh. Well, that shouldn't be happening! I sure wish we knew what was going on, there!" I may start trashing the place. Luckily, Mayo is great at figuring out stuff that is hard to figure out, but I wasn't pleased with their Harlem-Globetrotters-esque lightning fast handoffs that I went through last time there, only to learn that my back/bone issues are not something that falls under the purview of urology, medical oncology, radiation oncology or neurology. Knowing what it is not is strangely not as satisfying as doctors might guess. I'd rather focus on what it is

Anyhow, the leg pain has subsided again for the moment, so I guess I'll see if I can get some sleep.


Monday, January 09, 2012

The Axis of Evil

The Axis of Evil.
Though really not a great photo, there are times (like this) that one can see that I still think like a photo art director for a healthcare company. I thought that the brushed aluminium (a metal tin lid) gave the tiny pills a nice pop.


Today I took the plunge and spent $268 on the prescription for a month's worth of the 15mg oxycon-tin pill. The 20mg every 12 hours option really just wasn't lasting long enough, so now I'm going to try taking the 15mg every 8 hours (45mg a day).

At this point I have no confidence that it will be perfect, but I'll give it a try for a few days at a minimum, and am hopeful that it brings more consistent and reliable relief.

In the British parliament, they can call for a vote of "no confidence" when they're pissed off at their prime minister, which is always. The British parliament is famous for loud jeering and grumbling, so I am currently envisioning a similar metaphor happening in my body right now, complete with indignant-yet-deeply-witty catcalls -- expressing doubt at the newcomer's ability to fix what the predecessor could not -- plus a lot of gavel-banging and some shameless grandstanding and attention-seeking behavio(u)r on the part of other systems during the transition. Poor 15mg. It has its work cut out for it, make no mistake.

Friday, January 06, 2012

The 20mg Solution

***Note: as I'm using the names of a bunch of drugs that are addictive and have street value, I'm starting to be consistent about mis-spelling and mis-punctuating them. I really don't want my blog to end up in some junkie's Google search. ***

Today, as I mentioned previously, I just feel beat-up. I know that after a seizure (and I don't think I was having a seizure, but I feel that the aftereffects of intense tremors could be similar) people feel sore and wiped out, spent. That's me today. I've been napping virtually all day and I'm surprised that I can continue to climb back into bed and keep sleeping. Usually if I go down for a nap (which isn't every day, even when its a possibility) I'm only good to sleep for an hour max. Today, since 11 am, I've managed about 5 hours of sleeping.

I really think that the 20mg Oxy-tin is the way to go, now. That's what I'm on as of last night, and there is a subtle difference. Its more than the dosage, its like a subtly different drug. I remember taking vico-din as a kid after some dental work. That's the famed hydro-codone 5/325 tablet, according to Uncle Mike's Virtually Bottomless Store of Pharmaceutical Knowledge. 5mg of Oxy-done, and 325 of Tylenol/acetaminophen. Put simply, I really liked it. It made me feel like I was sitting under a warm blanket, inside on a chilly fall day, all safe and comfy. The world was quiet, I was kind, things were simple, and there wasn't that much to be concerned about. This is exactly why I've been leery of it: I clearly liked the stuff.

When they prescribed the Hydro-done 5/325 to me, they eventually stopped refilling the prescription because I was taking too many of them -- not out of some high-seeking behavior, but because it wasn't really doing enough for the pain at the recommended 1 pill every 4-6 hours. I was taking 2 of them every 2 hours at one point, or, put another way: dumping 650 mg of Tylenol into my system every 2 hours. That's way too much. The prescription didn't call for me taking it that often, but it was the only way to nuke the pain.

The maximum allowable daily dose of Tylenol/Acetaminophen *had been* 4,000 mg a day. Johnson and Johnson (the makers of the drug) announced in July 0f 2011 that they were reducing the maximum allowable daily dose to 3,000 milligrams. According to an article in the Huffington post, taking too much Tylenol can cause bad things, including liver damage. "In the U.S., it's blamed for about 200 fatal overdoses and sends 56,000 people to the emergency room each year." (http://preview.tinyurl.com/7h8fp79)

Perhaps Tylenol should adopt the use of Jace Everett's "True Blood" soundtrack song, "Bad Things" in their commercials. Of course the talkie bit would have to be replaced with a 3,000 mg a day warning. It would be entertaining, but sales would plummet.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MDY42pFwq7c

And so, back to our story.

The 5/325 was too much because I was (though without knowing it) exceeding the recommended daily dose by over 4,000 milligrams daily under the old schedule, and by more than 5,000 mg daily under the new recommended limit that Johnson and Johnson proposed. This only went on for a few days, but still.

So, then they took away (or allowed the prescription to run out, anyhow) my vico-din 5/325 and gave me just straight oxy-done 5mg -- no Tylenol. This is a drug that I was allowed to bump up to 2 pills every 2 hours, but they still weren't comfortable with that long-term. Which is what led to the Oxy-tin long-acting.

But, to get back to my 20mg vs 10mg comparison, the 10mg just didn't seem to be cutting it recently. Taking a 20mg oxy-tin last night and this afternoon seems to have changed my world view for the better. Yes, I am definitely more clumsy. I dropped a dish in to the sink yesterday, shattering both the dish and the pint glass that was already in the sink. I felt that warm-fuzzy-blanket feeling, and I'm sure that why I'm able to sleep more, also. I feel much less tense and irritable than I did yesterday.

Apparently being Tense and Irritable runs in the family, occasionally.

Tense and Irritable is the name of a book that my dad did in 1964, that I remember us having boxes of in the attic when I was growing up. I always liked it. I found a copy for sale on Amazon.com, of all places. They have everything. Even books! But I digress.

My main point being that I feel much better on the 20mg. Oddly, the pain is still there sometimes (though not as bad) but I just don't care about it as much. Which is guess is all that really matters. The calm and inner quiet that I feel can be linked to the wondrous absence of pain that I feel more of the time, today. Or it could just be that I'm doped up on prescription opiates. Same difference. I resisted as long as I could, but I think upping the dosage is the best for me and for everyone around me. 

I'm able to focus enough to write, anyhow. Though I drove my truck briefly this morning and probably shouldn't have been behind the wheel. I think that was still the Taze-O-Done working its way out of my system, more than the 20mg 'tin.

Anyhow, I continue to breathe better and have almost no difficulty swallowing. I guess I did have a big allergic reaction to the Taze-O-Done. Lesson learned, for me: don't take Trazodone. Put another way: Don't Traz me, bro.

Trazodone? Taze-O-Done is more like it.

I had one of those things where I typed a long update this morning at about 8am and then (due to the combination of the iPhone keyboard and my big fingers) briefly saw a screen that gave me the option for saving or deleting the draft, and -- just like lightning -- I accidentally pushed the big red "delete draft" button and it was all gone.

So, in a nutshell, I made it through the night OK. I slept fairly soundly from about 4 am unit 8 am. I don't remember if I got up at about 6 to use the bathroom or not, but if I didn't, it underscores the dehydration possibility -- as I chugged about 50 ounces of water at 3 am.

Another observation that points to the dehydration possibility: I woke up with a pounding hangover. I didn't have a drop to drink last night, of course -- but a hangover is basically dehydration. When I lived at high altitude I got used to humidities in the single digits for most of the year, and drinking water was essential, or else I would get what felt like a hangover headache.

But, to put this another way: I've had a dehydration hangover headache like this in the morning *without* having experienced muscle tremors and uncontrollable shakes in the middle of the night.

And, because I think it must be commented on as well, the chills and shakes that I experienced when they had me on Methadone were quite different. That was a cold-sweat-chills-clammy-shiver that told me it was time for my next dose. This one was more like MS, or my take on what it might feel like. It did not feel like withdrawal of anything, since I haven't changed any dosages recently except for adding little more of the Oxy'tin daily.

I have a call in to Dr, Larry to talk about last night and also see if there is any possibility of this side effect being from the Trazodone, the new sleeping pill.

But, due to the wonders of the internet, I already have part of my answer:


"Some side effects can be serious. If you experience any of the following symptoms or those listed in the IMPORTANT WARNING section, call your doctor immediately:"

"Normal" side effects:

-- Nausea (yep)
-- Vomiting (nearly)
-- Weakness (yep)
-- Dry mouth (yep)

Some of the worst side effects:

-- uncontrollable shaking of a part of the body (you becha)
-- shortness of breath (yep)
-- chest pain (yep)

Symptoms of overdose can include: (remember... I took only 1/2 of what was prescribed)

- vomiting (very nearly)
- difficulty breathing (yep)
- Seizures (I didin't exactly have them, but: scary!)

So, no more Trazodone for me. I'll talk to my doc and tell him what I experienced, and I'm guessing he'll agree with my assessment that its a bad one for me that I appear to be particularly reactive to.

Looking into it further, I don't like that I was essentially given an off-label usage for a medicine that is intended as an SSRI antidepressant. I know they're convinced over there that I'm depressed (and surely, I'm not crapping rainbows over here) but their little 2-minue Depression test that they run you through doesn't take into account the idea of chronic pain. I feel like if we get that addressed, I'll be a lot less "depressed". 

My doc is good and I don't think this was anything sneaky on his part. I've been working with him for years. But I'll certainly ask for clarification.

There is an option at the the NIH site that has the option to send a report after a particularly strong reaction. If my doctor doesn't, I'll do one myself.

Right now I still feel wrung out: I can't inhale all the way comfortably, and I am sore all over. This is not the back pain per se -- more like how you feel the day after slipping and falling on the ice. Everything is just a little sore.

Whether from dehydration or Trazodone or both, I don't know.

Here at 10 am I'm still basically doing OK on the back pain, so I'll plan to go until 2pm for the 20mg tablet. This is once every 12 hours, for 40 mg a day -- a fairly low dose option.

Anyhow, more naps may be in order today.

Status Update (continued)

At about 2:30 the shivering faded away to almost imperceptible levels. Back pain is much better but not totally gone. It does seem like the 20mg pill is what I need right now. Although I have taken a couple of 10mg pills over the past 12 hours, so it's not really a very accurate scientific experiment. I'll see if I can get to 2 pm without the pain returning. If so, will pop another 20mg for 40mg total in 24 hours.

This past hour I have been feeling extremely thirsty, and have consumed about 1/2 gallon of water since I woke up. My tongue still seems dry, but coil be a side effect of the Oxy-tin. I did drink water today, of course: though less than normal.

I remember (with sadness) watching Kaia go through what looked like something similar (shivers, shakes) after she stopped drinking water, near the end. In her case, dehydration was almost certainly the cause. If my shivers were caused by dehydration it would have to have been pretty severe to get to the point of uncontrollable muscle tremors. Ir so I assume, in my non-doctor way. The water tastes good and so I'm continuing with that, slowly and steadily.

At about 3am I was struck by a intense wave of nausea. You know the signs: watering mouth, desire to spit, etc. certain that I knew what was next, I went so far as to move to the bathroom, bringing in (perhaps ironically) one of Kaia's old dog beds to sit on. I also took a 1mg antinausea pill (which I'm surprised stayed down). I'm not a throw-uppey person. I heaved just once in the past 30 years: the night after the first chemo treatment this summer. This time was close, though so far I seem to have avoided it.

I alao made myself a single piece of wheat toast a minute ago, which is what I would do for my dogs after they'd throw up, to settle their tummies if it seems like all they have sloshing around in there is pills. The pill is staying down as well, and the nausea is fading.

An odd night, but so far everything feels under control. The nausea and shivers are odd and new, and I really wish I knew what they could be from. Dehydration is possible, but seems like a long shot.

Likely heading back to bed soon, but will probably wait until 4am to be sure. The anti-nausea pills put me to sleep also, so I may not have much choice in the matter!

Anyhow: I hope this is just an anomaly, but I will call my G.P. (Dr. Larry) on Friday to keep him in the loop.

Likely I will have no more updates until Friday late morning, for those who might be worried.

Man, is it ever quiet this time of night. Even in the city.

Status Report

Awakened at 2am with intense back pain, mostly noticeable in the left mid-back. Before bed, I had taken a 10mg oxy-tin at 10 pm to try to get to 4x a day (every 6 hours) for that. It seems to have lasted 4 hours.

Upon getting out of bed I found that I have intense, constant, body-wide shivers that make it nearly impossible to type. They dont seem to be relate to cold or temperature. I took my temperature and it is 98.7. I took a 20 g oxy-tin at 2am for the pain but am now staying up (sitting on the couch, bundled up) because I am extremely worried. If shivers don't get better in a few hours I'll finish the night in the ER, which is really not how I'd planned to spend my weekend. If the shivers persist and I need a ride I *will* ask for one, don't worry. Right now this is scary and strange, but I don't think ER-worthy just yet. An hour or two will tell. I feel obliged to post an update as soon as I know more so that people don't worry.

Ps: I also took 1/2 of a new sleeping pill prescription before bed (can't remember the name, and don't really want to go to the kitchen to check). It didn't really make me all that sleepy, actually. It is always possible that all of this is related, but I have no idea.

Sent from my iPhone

Thursday, January 05, 2012

Some New Ideas

I met with Dr. Larry today (my G.P.) to talk about pain issues. My experience with Dr. Bonzo (my palliative care doc that I was seeing for awhile) led me away from working with her and towards my experienced regular, head-to-toe doc. I haven't been keeping him in the loop enough recently, anyhow.

At the appointment my blood pressure was fairly high (146/90) which is way high for me -- or for anyone else, for that matter. Human normal is (last I checked) about 120/80. Possibly this high number was because I'd really only had coffee to drink that day, or possibly it could be that I have been in a lot of pain and irritable as a side-effect. Or maybe it was that I'd just taken a walk. Or some combination of all of the above. This is only a footnote to this account, anyhow.

At the appointment I asked Dr. Larry if one could be come accustomed to opiates and therefore experience a decreased effect, and he said yes: one could develop a tolerance to the drug over time. Another question I asked was whether or not I could take this 12-hour pill every 8 hours, and apparently that is totally fine. I also mentioned that when I take my 12-hour pill, it only really seems to last for about 6-9 hours. (It used to work great, and either the pain is increasing or the effectiveness is decreasing or some combination thereof).

I got some new prescriptions and was left with a few decisions to make.

Essentially, I am faced with the necessity of upping the dosage. I'm at the point where I can't really comfortably live with the pain on the current dosage. This will take some further monkeying to get them all right, but there are a bunch of options:

10mg 3x daily (30 mg total)
(Current schedule)
Downside: isn't really cutting it, pain-wise.
Upside: Less drugs in my system than all the other options.

20 mg 2x daily (40 mg total)
Downside: 12-hour pills may not be lasting long enough for me. So this could still leave me stranded here and there during the day. 
Upside: the 20mg tablets do seem to work.

10 mg 24x daily (40 mg total)
Downside: individual pills may not be strong enough to ever really cover the pain, though coverage should be fairly even. Also, will have to set an alarm for every 6 hours, day and night.
Upside: could cover all the gaps, if the pills aren't lasting as long.

20 mg 3x daily (60mg total)
Downside: Lots and lots of chemicals, and (potentially) doubled side effects over my current dosage.
Upside: Totally ought to work. It may be like hunting goldfish with a hand grenade -- in terms of precision and effectiveness -- but it should definitely eliminate all the pain. I may drop a lot of things and be a really dangerous driver, but I should be feeling great.

15 mg 3x daily (45 mg total)
Downside: this would be a totally new pill for me, I haven't ever taken a 15mg before, so I'm not quite sure how it would feel. But it might be the baby-bear-bed magical middle ground between the too-weak 10mg and the too-strong 20mg. Oh, another downside is that it is TWO HUNDRED AND THIRTY EIGHT FRIGGING DOLLARS for a month's supply. I was in a poor mood anyhow, but this news pushed me over the edge and I rejected the prescription bottle and walked out of Walgreens in a huff. So now this 15mg is currently *not* an option until I find out if there is a generic or something. Or actually pay the $238. Whichever comes first. 
Upside: May very well work, and is a good middle ground option.

Another alternative to shelling out $238 is to wait for about 3 weeks until the prescriptions will be completely covered by insurance. But really, it's just a shell game I'm playing by myself, here. My medical insurance, MCHA, has a $2,000 annual out of pocket deductible. Because it is still early in 2012, I haven't hit that deductible yet (I'll hit it just a few weeks). So: I can spend it now or spend it later -- but either way I'm still going to end up paying the first $2,000 that my health care costs this year. After that point, all doctor visits and prescriptions cost $0.00. Maybe its that I would personally rather give my money to Mayo Clinic than to Walgreens, but I know it really doesn't matter: each will get paid, whether by me or by insurance is immaterial.

For revised drug plans, I've all but decided on the 10 mg 4x/day currently, but I would also like to try the 15mg 3x/day. And now I really wish I hadn't rejected the prescription when they handed me the bill at Walgreens. Now I'll need to se if they can still fill it, or I'll need to get a new prescription.

I'm essentially balancing pill strength versus length of time that the pill is active, while trying to keep the daily mg. total to a minimum.

I feel like there's a way to write this all out in a mathematical formula. Basically I'm just making stuff up now, but I feel like it could be written out all sciencey, like:

Dmg = Pr - Lt

Where Pr is Pain Reduction, Lt is Length of Time and Mg is Daily milligrams. 

Or another example that just occurred to me (that looks similarly sciencey):

someone losing an eye ≠ everything being fun

Which is completely unrelated, but true.

Earlier tonight I took a single 5mg oxy(codone). Oxy(codone) is the fast-acting "normal" version of the sustained-release Oxy(Contin) that I usually take. I almost never take the Oxy'done at all, but this was a a "scientific" experiment to see if I felt any effect from it. The effect was only very slight, and my guess is that taking a total of 2 (10mg) would have probably fixed the pain for a few hours. I won't mess with taking more of those unless I really need them, but I was just curious. I'm sure there's some science to pill effectiveness and it seems like a 20mg tablet would be twice as strong as a 10mg, but it really seems to be more like 3 times as strong.  Also, the 12-hour 20mg Oxy'Tin is for some reason more effective than taking a 5mg Oxy'Done every 3 hours, and easier on the system also. Don't ask me why.

So now you know the sorts of things I spend my days thinking about.